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Internal combustion engine: gasoline engine (Adiabats) A gasoline engine utilizes the Otto cycle, in which fuel and air are mixed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dec' 1


1
Dec. 1
2
Lecture 26, Dec. 1
  • Goals
  • Chapter 19
  • Understand the relationship between work and
    heat in a cycling process
  • Follow the physics of basic heat engines and
    refrigerators.
  • Recognize some practical applications in real
    devices.
  • Know the limits of efficiency in a heat engine.
  • Assignment
  • HW11, Due Friday, Dec. 5th
  • HW12, Due Friday, Dec. 12th
  • For Wednesday, Read through all of Chapter 20

3
Heat Engines and Refrigerators
  • Heat Engine Device that transforms heat into
    work ( Q ? W)
  • It requires two energy reservoirs at different
    temperatures
  • An thermal energy reservoir is a part of the
    environment so large with respect to the system
    that its temperature doesnt change as the system
    exchanges heat with the reservoir.
  • All heat engines and refrigerators operate
    between two energy reservoirs at different
    temperatures TH and TC.

4
Heat Engines
For practical reasons, we would like an engine to
do the maximum amount of work with the minimum
amount of fuel. We can measure the performance of
a heat engine in terms of its thermal efficiency
? (lowercase Greek eta), defined as
We can also write the thermal efficiency as
5
Exercise Efficiency
  • Consider two heat engines
  • Engine I
  • Requires Qin 100 J of heat added to system to
    get W10 J of work (done on world in cycle)
  • Engine II
  • To get W10 J of work, Qout 100 J of heat is
    exhausted to the environment
  • Compare eI, the efficiency of engine I, to eII,
    the efficiency of engine II.

6
Exercise Efficiency
  • Compare eI, the efficiency of engine I, to eII,
    the efficiency of engine II.
  • Engine I
  • Requires Qin 100 J of heat added to system to
    get W10 J of work (done on world in cycle)
  • h 10 / 100 0.10
  • Engine II
  • To get W10 J of work, Qout 100 J of heat is
    exhausted to the environment
  • Qin W Qout 100 J 10 J 110 J
  • h 10 / 110 0.09

7
Refrigerator (Heat pump)
  • Device that uses work to transfer heat from a
    colder object to a hotter object.

8
The best thermal engine ever, the Carnot engine
  • A perfectly reversible engine (a Carnot engine)
    can be operated either as a heat engine or a
    refrigerator between the same two energy
    reservoirs, by reversing the cycle and with no
    other changes.
  • A Carnot cycle for a gas engine consists of two
    isothermal processes and two adiabatic processes
  • A Carnot engine has max. thermal efficiency,
    compared with any other engine operating between
    TH and TC
  • A Carnot refrigerator has a maximum coefficient
    of performance, compared with any other
    refrigerator operating between TH and TC.

9
The Carnot Engine
  • Carnot showed that the thermal efficiency of a
    Carnot engine is
  • All real engines are less efficient than the
    Carnot engine because they operate irreversibly
    due to the path and friction as they complete a
    cycle in a brief time period.

10
Problem
  • You can vary the efficiency of a Carnot engine by
    varying the temperature of the cold reservoir
    while maintaining the hot reservoir at constant
    temperature.
  • Which curve that best represents the efficiency
    of such an engine as a function of the
    temperature of the cold reservoir?

Temp of cold reservoir
11
The Carnot Engine (the best you can do)
  • No real engine operating between two energy
    reservoirs can be more efficient than a Carnot
    engine operating between the same two reservoirs.
  • A?B, the gas expands isothermally while in
    contact with a reservoir at Th
  • B?C, the gas expands adiabatically (Q0 ,
    DUWB?C ,Th ?Tc), PVgconstant
  • C?D, the gas is compressed isothermally while in
    contact with a reservoir at Tc
  • D?A, the gas compresses adiabatically (Q0 ,
    DUWD?A ,Tc ? Th)

P
Qh
A
B
Wcycle
D
C
Qc
V
12
Carnot Cycle Efficiency
  • eCarnot 1 - Qc/Qh
  • Q A?B Q h WAB nRTh ln(VB/VA)
  • Q C?D Q c WCD nRTc ln(VD/VC)
  • (here we reference work done by gas, dU 0 Q
    P dV)
  • But PAVAPBVBnRTh and PCVCPDVDnRTc
  • so PB/PAVA/VB and PC/PDVD/V\C
  • as well as PBVBgPCVCg and PDVDgPAVAg
  • with PBVBg/PAVAgPCVCg/PDVDg thus
  • ? ( VB /VA )( VD /VC )
  • Qc/Qh Tc/Th
  • Finally

Qh
A
B
Q0
Wcycle
Q0
D
C
Qc
13
Other cyclic processes Turbines
  • A turbine is a mechanical device that extracts
    thermal energy from pressurized steam or gas, and
    converts it into useful mechanical work. 90 of
    the world electricity is produced by steam
    turbines.
  • Steam turbines jet engines use a Brayton cycle

14
Steam Turbine in Madison
  • MGE, the electric power plan in Madison, boils
    water to produce high pressure steam at 400C.
    The steam spins the turbine as it expands, and
    the turbine spins the generator. The steam is
    then condensed back to water in a
    Monona-lake-water-cooled heat exchanger, down to
    20C.
  • Carnot Efficiency?

15
The Sterling Cycle
  • Return of a 1800s thermodynamic cycle

SRS Solar System (27 eff.)
16
Sterling cycles
  • 1 Q, V constant ? 2 Isothermal expansion ( Won
    system lt 0 ) ?
  • 3 Q, V constant ? 4 Q out, Isothermal
    compression ( Won sysgt 0)
  • Q1 nR CV (TH - TC)
  • Won2 -nR TH ln (Vb / Va) -Q2
  • Q3 nR CV (TC - TH)
  • Won4 -nR TL ln (Va / Vb) -Q4
  • QCold - (Q3 Q4 )
  • QHot (Q1 Q2 )
  • h 1 QCold / QHot

17
Carnot Cycle Efficiency
Power from ocean thermal gradients oceans
contain large amounts of energy
  • eCarnot 1 - Qc/Qh 1 - Tc/Th

See http//www.nrel.gov/otec/what.html
18
Ocean Conversion Efficiency
eCarnot 1 - Tc/Th 1 275 K/300 K
0.083 (even before internal losses and
assuming a REAL cycle) Still This potential
is estimated to be about 1013 watts of base load
power generation, according to some experts. The
cold, deep seawater used in the OTEC process is
also rich in nutrients, and it can be used to
culture both marine organisms and plant life near
the shore or on land. Energy conversion
efficiencies as high as 97 were
achieved. See http//www.nrel.gov/otec/what.h
tml So e 1-Qc/Qh is always correct but eCarnot
1-Tc/Th only reflects a Carnot cycle
19
Internal combustion engine gasoline engine
  • A gasoline engine utilizes the Otto cycle, in
    which fuel and air are mixed before entering the
    combustion chamber and are then ignited by a
    spark plug.

Otto Cycle
  • (Adiabats)

20
Internal combustion engine Diesel engine
  • A Diesel engine uses compression ignition, a
    process by which fuel is injected after the air
    is compressed in the combustion chamber causing
    the fuel to self-ignite.

21
Thermal cycle alternatives
  • Fuel Cell Efficiency (from wikipedia) Fuel
    cells do not operate on a thermal cycle. As such,
    they are not constrained, as combustion engines
    are, in the same way by thermodynamic limits,
    such as Carnot cycle efficiency. The laws of
    thermodynamics also hold for chemical processes
    (Gibbs free energy) like fuel cells, but the
    maximum theoretical efficiency is higher (83
    efficient at 298K ) than the Otto cycle thermal
    efficiency (60 for compression ratio of 10 and
    specific heat ratio of 1.4).
  • Comparing limits imposed by thermodynamics is not
    a good predictor of practically achievable
    efficiencies
  • The tank-to-wheel efficiency of a fuel cell
    vehicle is about 45 at low loads and shows
    average values of about 36. The comparable
    value for a Diesel vehicle is 22.
  • Honda Clarity
  • (now leased in CA and gets
  • 70 mpg equivalent)
  • This does not include H2
  • production distribution

22
Fuel Cell Structure
23
Problem-Solving Strategy Heat-Engine Problems
24
Going full cycle
  • 1 mole of an ideal gas and PV nRT ? T
    PV/nR
  • T1 8300 0.100 / 8.3 100 K T2 24900
    0.100 / 8.3 300 K
  • T3 24900 0.200 / 8.3 600 K T4 8300
    0.200 / 8.3 200 K
  • (Wnet 166000.100 1660 J)
  • 1?2
  • DEth 1.5 nR DT 1.5x8.3x200 2490 J
  • Wby0 Qin2490 J QH2490 J
  • 2?3
  • DEth 1.5 nR DT 1.5x8.3x300 3740 J
  • Wby2490 J Qin3740 J QH 6230 J
  • 3?4
  • DEth 1.5 nR DT -1.5x8.3x400 -4980 J
  • Wby0 Qin-4980 J QC4980 J
  • 4?1
  • DEth 1.5 nR DT -1.5x8.3x100 -1250 J
  • Wby-830 J Qin-1240 J QC 2070 J
  • QH(total) 8720 J QC(total) 7060 J h
    1660 / 8720 0.19 (very low)

25
Exercise
  • If an engine operates at half of its theoretical
    maximum efficiency (emax) and does work at the
    rate of W J/s, then, in terms of these
    quantities, how much heat must be discharged per
    second.
  • This problem is about process (Q and W),
    specifically QC?
  • emax 1- QC/QH and e ½ emax ½(1- QC/QH)
  • also W e QH ½ emax QH ? 2W / emax QH
  • -QH (emax -1) QC ? QC 2W / emax (1 -
    emax)

26
Lecture 26, Dec. 1
  • Assignment
  • HW11, Due Friday, Dec. 5th
  • HW12, Due Friday, Dec. 12th
  • For Wednesday, Read through all of Chapter 20
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